If It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 282 Stefan Kuczmij of Bienfait, Gask., was reunited with ‘his met her on her arrival by air REUNITED AFTER 37 YEARS dduthertsed Second Class i wae and for . 2 woey rier from Moscow. Mrs. Kuczmij was 18 when her husband left Russia to come to Canada in 1928 and the Red Cross work- ed for five years to help re- unite them. The couple will live at Bienfait, where Mr. Kucz- mij is a railway section fore- man. (CP Wirephote). Che Gui dian “(‘nua-e Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ,RLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1965. eoprt wr ~~greement 34 WEA wor uoe® SEVEN CENTS ONE HAT IN RING ‘Dr. Bonnell Undecided On Leadership Contest At indication last night that| It had been expected to have.| Acting Leader Dr. Lorne Bon-|Prime Minister Pearson, but | in 1043. mell, Murray River, may not ithe PM sent his regrets when he | It was Thane A. Campbell as contest the Liberal Party con-/found that it would interfere | he was then, who led the Liberal ‘vention to name a provincial |with a two-week vacation he and | party to an unprecedented and | province-wide gathering which |in the Leeward Islands | back in July 1935. He was named is called foy Charlottetown! A fund-raising dinner is plan-| campaign leader for the elect- on Saturday of fiext week. ned for the evening following the | ion after it became apparent Alexander Campbell; who leonvention. The Basilica Recrea- | that the then party leader, Wal- mas 31 years of age when he | tion Centre is the scene and the’| ter M. Lea of Victoria, would be won election to the Provincial | price is $10 a plate. | unable to do so because of, ifi- Legislature last February, has| . Campbell is the son of | ness. indicated he definitely will be a| qpief Justice Thane A. Camp-| Mr. Campbell became pre- leadership candidate. Previously | 563) of Summerside who was|mier in January of the follow- dt had been taken for granted | gremier of the province from | ing year when Premier Lea died. that Dr. Bonnell would also be ; : : a thea Slee tak tha’ Uk: January 1936 until he resigned! (Continued on page 3 Col. 4) ership post he has filled in an | acting capacity since the execu- tive of the P.E.1. Liberal Asso- ciation named him to that post earlier this year. said | i 1 fee ="= |5 Quebec Teenagers pressure on him to allow his mame to come before the con- vention, but he has not made up | leader, sparked interest in the |Mrs. Pearson are now enjoying | unmatched triumph of 30 to 0} ‘ } ELECTED Louis-Paul Neveu, Liberal candidate in the Shefford rid- ing in Quebec in the Nov. 8 election, was officially declar- | ed elected Wednesday follow- ing a judicial recount. He was | given 9,494 votes compared | with 9,467 for Paul Terpanier, Conservative, who- had been unofficially elected on basis of election-night returns. (CP Wirephote) { his mind as yet. He told The =2ee= == Steal Hearing Show Is Reported Reveal By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (CP) Highly- placed sources here said Wed- | their Aug. 5 positions before fighting started in Kashmir. The sources said that al- though the two countries have accepted the principle of with- drawal, the agreement could collapse if no adequate military plan for it is formulated. United. Nations headquarters announced Nov. 26 that Brig.- has been appointed to discuss with representatives ef the two countries an agreed plan for withdrawal Sources said the Canadian im- terpretation is that India and Pakistan are willing to with- draw. One source close to the ca- binet went further than this by |\gaying that thé two United Na- \tions groups im the area—in \Kashmir and in Punjab — will ‘play an important part in ob- \serving the withdrawal. | The pull-hack of forces will Gen. Tulio Maramdio of Chile | — THER Scattered snowflurries; winds southwest 20, becoming northerly 15. Iow-high 28 and 35. Friday: sunny; colder. 22 PAGES ie . . ? Kashmir Pullback Ottawa Sources Plans urThe tue: UN Gumne sot arms an important part the withdrawal,” e highly |\meesday that India and Pakistan |placed informant: said. \have tenatively agreed to pull) their military forces back to | “The Chilean general will meet the two parties to agree to plans for a withdrawal eo troops te the positions of Aug, 5,” the source eaid. ime Canadians participate in operations of both contingents, LED BY CANADIAN presence of UN the area. They said a sharp reductios im the number of breac of the ceasefire became a ® . " |Guardian’s Montague bureau) ¢ apply in the Punjab as well as|just before the agreement. © that he would make a definite ssovrppaL,. (cP) — Repte-|bers. conducting the bearings) FEIMIME Fecar [iz Kashmir, informants, snid:| A pullback by the tro side y' ’ aoa i Fighting ,began in August with |could lead before long to with . Persons close to the Murray sentatives of 15 Quebec teen-| bere beamed down at the) Fini ; 2 : Ri | A a Pakistan infiltration into the |drawal of the UN contingents. - iver doctor, who has a large | Seats who hiked and thumbed) French - speaking teen - agers, | Expr Indian-held portion of Kashmir| Canada has said at the UN . ‘ Tictori who represented the club Rou- : goockieny come Sy © focieg © soe way, woe to Vicia "i oe | and epread later te the India-|General Assembly that the : : a —— that unusually | back ee ean Nicolet icolet, 70, . Pakistan border territory south |groups should not be expecte . He operates a medical clin-| show at hearings of the royal|miles northeast of Montreal. | [f} INGUIG - of Kashmir to stay for en unlimited time, Ualan ee ower 0! : ‘ie in Montague with his brother, | commission on bilingualism The club made its trip wat | ; men F De ..gae, Roget, ont Se _bee- oe needa’. |\Nast summer and came back By CONRAD FINK : a ' 2 o i : oe ing, among other things,| NEW DELHI (AP)—Fearins By HAROLD MORRISON aircraft carrier Eagle now is\main British while Kaunda be — =? are i ee obabiy | White scarves of their hiking-|that Toronto “doesn't seen 80 | India is heading for a ticnive, LONDON (CP) — Shifting |¢ruising off the Tanzanian jlieved wanting at least 2° share keep Bie cacy for probab! |elub uniform, they told the com-| British and anti-French as it is|an aroused: political opposition eloser to African demands, Brit- \coast. All military steps being in the command structure.) approximate: | mission: often. described.” assailed Prime Minister Lat’ Ba- | ™ the ee Coe pel fein The club came out es “What is lacking in the Cana- dian marriage (of the two founding races) is love. If _ Shawte”s in Portia ¥, government 2 4 Food. Minister :-Chidambaram | ‘Subramaniam had just con-; @ greater amalgamation of big} firmed Meanwhile, W.R. Jenkins, Smith | Charlottetown. who is president the P.E.1. Liberal Association ast night awaiting definite against: Quebec separatism. because “it ‘history . . . which is inclined } the new constitntion “ts fo be’ & é To Probe Money cee er Sta anteater |r te ated ie me |e Sct! Tae ‘genre * a ext man who is d to be guest nspi the young.” /qocieties.” sai y t. 8 : Zambia. 5 Dean act of war if (goods from Rhodesia "will, be (speaker #¢ the convention, the five commission’ wie Hiepnmeenren BY cong. [WS SEEM ies cestury) OAK ISLAND, N's. (CP)—A| However, im “lgging cast , ‘; hodesia will be ane aaised the grim prospect of se-|¢losed - circuit “television cam- As African thinisters gathered |Britain invades Rhodesia, but banned and virtually all pay- The boys, represented at the | vere food and water shortages edi“into' the yn (Deing Used te burrow into the in Ethiopia to plan action ot | Wilson countered that “it is not iments from Britons to Rhodes- ° Pe ° commission hearing by their a : (on a 0 the ee ae island’s clay soil leaves today tn act of war ‘or British {roops ines will be blocked wahieer.| Diefenbaker Has Promise “eiak” Rene Kirousc, wad tom! 74 ruitister, told tat beekieg | 20 cad” “get a good plo It. tenis cad maior toe their own M Britain fails to oust |4, enter British “ ception of payments for taahs : nw , other club officials, came out|*he food shortage, there may |mesday and “got a good ple-|Mr, Dunfield said another the Smith rebels, Prime Minis-| (The Associated Press slat éiliernien reciticted ois for what they called “inter-cul- mot be: enough drinking water |ture’’ of the deep hole reaching ger machine on order from ter. Wilson announced in the |ported later that President Ken. | Even pensioners will’ be hit. Of Firm PC Opposition turalism” in a brief that con- for men and animals and some — a ns fortune in gold| Moncton will not arrive until Commens Wednesday that |meth Kaunda gave Britain the |British. civil servants who re ’ tained many sophisticated |Sultivation may have to be and Jewels. - - |'Monday, ‘jpt—the earliest. along with sterner economic jall-clear from Lusaka to move |tired ‘in Rhodesia and Rhodes | By DAVE NICHOLSON {run like a business to save *?™S. en 1A oe ea le an, nee Mahone ts gid to) Wadeeiinye off ost é. at. measures against Rhodesia, he \air units into Zambia and" that |ians who live on earnings from| SYDNEY (CP) — Conserva-| time. | Peoples representing different | He s#id that only continued Inge |tbe derived from the old French |earthed more old wood that has is Teady to Zambia with [British government informants British government bonds and/tive Leader Diefenbaker indi-| ‘‘Hitler operated it that way, | Cultures should get together and ee ae veryiiien word “‘mahonne”, a low-lying|hampered digging operations @ squadron of Javelin fighter. ‘stocks won't get any more funds |cated Wednesday his party will | Mussolini operated it that way. | this was true of the French- and avert widespt - jeraft used by pirates. The tele-|for more than a week, but it He disclosed that the British Astronauts Said Ready For Flight - CAPE KENNEDY, Fila. (AP) ~Gemini-7- astronauts Frank Bor- WARE. Ai man and James A. Lovell Jr. underwent a five-hour medical hearty and raring to start their two-week space adventure Sat- urday. ever planned on a U.S. man-in-| | space flight: Hopefully, the study- will an-| swer such questions 46: Do) bones grow old during long ex- posure to weightlessness? Can man be protected from develop- a “lazy heart’’.in space? deep does an’ astronaut Can man survive well in space to make a 14-| flight to the moon, the long- | S ma 7 1" m? extensive - physical. Wednesday: |- They will receive a final exam days before their sched- nléed Dec. 13 blastoff. CALLS FOR RENDEZVOUS The double Gemin' shot calls for a rendezvous and formation flizht of the two spaceships 185 miles above the earth—perhaps within inches of each other. © i Sete +9 A 0° tr on ‘ ONLY 20 SHOPPING -; { DAYS TILL i : . juntil: the white-minority Smith (The AP quoted the sources regime is toppled. - The saying the Zambian and government advised ail British British governments have not |companies to follow a similar yet agreement on the |policy. 4 terms = which a battalion eel But Wilson rejected the im ground forces move into |position of an oil embargo. He the republic on rebellious white |said he still is discussing this ruled Rhodesia’s northern froa- |with other countries but maim tier. tained" such: an embargo could (The issue dividing Kaundajeasily be broken by eutrepren- and Wilson.«@t the moment: was jeurs and. profiteers..A United understood centre on ‘the{Nations resolution called question of the control of these|/such an embargo but Wilson British: troops, The AP sai@—|maintained this is not manda- Wilson wanting command tq jtory ve Fara planned in the Apollo pro-| » @ 5 provide firm opposition to the Liberal government when Par- liament resumes early ‘next year. ; Mr. Diefenbaker told a’ serv- ice club meeting here that it ‘was the function of the opposi- tion to make sure ‘everythin ghali be dealt with carefully.” g\jested: ‘‘While I have no idea | people For the commissioners the | Stalin operated it that way, | Saglidh-speeines in Canada. They also knew how to dispose| “Through no merit of their of oppositions. own,” said the boys, “young Earlier in the day, Mr .Dief- people have a sense of unity enbaker was given an honorary | greater than that found in any- life membership in the Cape! one else and are also better at He later ignoring the factors that divide | | at the moment of. returning f0f | ters of the Sydney Kiwanis. and The Opposition léader outlined the role of the opposition in an anecdote-filled: speech to mem- the active practice of law, -'hoys provided the high point of haps in the years ahead, ithe third and last day of Mont- jage finally comes to me, you | real hearings. |may find me here.” . ; The two events were part of "s schedule. Rotary clubs. | “Some think we in Parlia- ment are enemies because we disagre, “Mr. Diefenbaker said. But without such disagree- ments, ‘‘there could be no dem- ocracy.”’ The Conservative leader was turned up Wednesday. to answer submis- ities cee — sotto cs of fated s of College Militaire where he was greeted by-mu- ‘ nicipal officials and: fist : Royal at St. Johns, Que. At. North Sydney, Mr. Diefen-| They told the commission baker signed the town’s register | that " LUCKY TEENAGER -Mary Anne Murfay of Phii- at Eden Hail Convent in Phil- iphia has won two Cadil- ia, said “It’s a unbeliev- Mustang in a raffie atiy fantastic”. A statistician year. In-addition to — at Rell Laboratories estimated she won a $200 hand that it was a 150 million to one $100 gift certificate, chance for anyone to win three several other smaii ‘Close Seaway Areas -| freighter closed two: sections of | Message to all ship masters and tithe St. Lawrence Seaway Wed- agents, advising them that the + | Mesday. a little more than two) water temperature jacheduled to close for the win-|end of he seaway was 33.4 de- = | concerned by people who won-/and took a stroll along the wa- feel there shqyld be more! dered why Parliament was not 'terfront. French-Canadian “un in the! Canadian Army—for sake of | | efficiency.” | AE ta ale, Grounded Ship By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Wednesday, the seaway auth- A-gale and a grounded jority sent out a general radio i at the -St: before the seaway is| Lambert lock at the Montreal ter. igrees. This was one-tenth of a ‘The winds that reached 55 degree below the reading last miles an hour along the St. year at this time. 4 Lawrence River forced the clo-| powever. a long-range fore- sing of three locks there and 16+ Wednesday, the authority autos in the three drawings. , CAP Wirephote) fave rise to fears that some of sookesman said, indicated a we 6 ocegn vessels still in, the | warming trend at Montreal, gi- - may be caught by Win- ving rise te hopes that the wea- | The Welland ship canal was tier wake pomely give ohip- | Closed during the day with the | added complication of a grounded ocean freighter. There weré still ™ ocean ships to INSIDE TODAY clear the canal into Lake On- ‘ fario. At one time 2% lake Classified . eevee ss BM 2 freighters also waited passage BUM oi ccpscsecessp sss 2 there, 14 of them into Lake On- MOE ich icectbaeness> 3 tario- MND Cie caalt Cee ee ses 19 The Welland Canal was Sport ........... 13 scheduled to close at midnight) Finance, markets .....- 18 Wednesday and the entire sea-) Rural churches esaeeee 4 way by midnight Friday. But a We ari hive eeveses t] St. Lawrence Seaway Authority | eee iasali< bsugees 4 4 spokesman said the locks will | cong 0 ee : temain non a day-to-day ba- | ? ae oe “Ontario Li A ope i Prince ow 8 eral: Leader An- ais as long as ice conditions per- mit. drew Thompson talks with re- porters in Peterborough, Ont, * ee FAR Among the brief-writers who | Subramaniam outlined pro- posed emer gency measures, euch as creating priority groups of children and pregnant wo- men to receive special food and vitamins. He said cattle camps should be created so that milk cows and draft animals would be assured of food and water. | CHARGE COMPLACENCY Right-wing forces joined with feftists in — charging —-Shastri’s middie - road socialist regme jwth complacency, dishonesty | and ignorarice because it- failed lto head off. the critical food ‘shortages. The parliamentary | criticism was the roughest Sha- tri has faced in months. Indrajit Gupta, a Communist, ‘'a Jot of French-Canadians | derided Shastri’s pleas, that In- | dia’s 480,000,000 people miss a meal a week and make sacri- fices to help the nation pull through the emergency. vision circuit is the latest de- vice used by California . geolo- gist Robert R. Dunfeld in his gearch for loot sad to have been cached there by buccan- eers. ‘ Mr. Dunfield said the picture showed the hole was standing up well. A 70-ton digging ma- chine clawed away another four feet of earth Wednesday, but he said revised calculations placed the excavation depth at “about 140 feet instead of 152 feet re- ed earlier. Mr. Dunfield’s. first objective is a depth of 155 feet, the height of Niagara’s Horseshoe Falls. | NEW’ DIESEL ARRIVES | A new diesel generator, which produces 550 volts for the sub- mersible pump and night light- ing, arrived Wednesday after the original generator broke down Tuesday. ONTARIO LIBERAL LEADER FOUND GUILTY May prove mi agement than a hindrance. Dunfield said hand-hewn loge. were brought up that a visiting provincial forest service official beleved might be hemlock, a wood ‘hot native to the area. ‘Icebreaking Tug Arrives In Lakes KINGSTON (OP)-—-The Foun dation Vanguard, an ocean-go- ing tug that will break ice. this winter on a ferry run between Kingston and Wolfe Island in Lake Ontario, arrived here from Halifax Wednesday. The tug, owned by Foundation Maritime Ltd. of Halifax, will work with the Ferry Wolfe Ie lander, operated by the Ontarie highways department. = Wednesday after being con- was fined $250 and costs. The and failing te share the roa@,~ victed on a charge of danzer- ous driving. Mr. Thompson \ Liberal Leader still faces charges of careless driving which Feb. ; ; 7 hk “Aint Bite teniteniee CARR cT te SG: Mette Race tl is Are iden otgiirinna ne! mid eventnwd